It is true that this is the time period which saw the birth of the medieval woollen cloth industry, and that the finest woollens were plain coloured. But there were patterns too, and if we start looking around in texts, in illumianted manuscripts and at preserved textiles we get a different image of the fashions of the high middle ages.
Firstly, striped wool fabrics are mentioned frequently in written sources from the Low Countries, usually cheaper and half woollens/half worsteds or just worsteds. Stripes are a popular way to create an easy pattern in an illustration, but also appears to have been fashionable, since we find them not only in simple illustrations, but also in illuminations where lots of work is put in.
By the way, for anyone who has read, or read about, the French art historian Michel Pastoreau's book The Devil's Cloth
A History of Stripes and Striped Fabric, I should add here that I am not convinced of his arguing that striped fabric was reserved for the devil and wrongdoers in the Middle Ages - in fact, even in his own book he has to define all kinds of patterns, such as checks, and shaggy furs, as stripes to get enough good examples. Even then the theory doesn't hold up for the Middle Ages if you take into account more images and more types of them, written sources, and preserved textiles - I don't see se the Virgin Mary, or Jesus as emissaries of the Devil for example.

These images probably show silk fabrics, and patterned silks such as damasks, samite and brocades are also found in documentary as well as literary sources from the period.

Judging from manuscripts patterns could be of many different kinds, but roundels, stylized flowers, roundels and stripes/borders appear to be the most common. other patterns were also often organized in stripes, such as on this beatiful early 14th century image from the Lisle Hours.

Pierpont Morgan Library, Lisle hours MS G.50 fol. 6v 1316-31

Or on this late 13th century Spanish fragment of a tunic, now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

The Spaniards were extremely fond of stripes in the 13th and 14th centuries, anad also had their own fashions, rather different from the rest of Western Europe, but as seen on the king above, patterned stripes were found in other parts of Europe too.

Here are some more examples of woven in patterns from 13th and early 14th century Europe.

From the book Merchants, princes and painters. Silk fabrics in Italian and Northers paintings 1300-1550, by Lisa Monnas. My friend Janne Helene has written a blog post about it and what sounds like a lovely book on textiles in art and reality here.

And, finally, an Italian 13th century brocade with fleur de lys and stripes. Again from the Metropolitan museum of Art.

Patterns were not only woven in, but also embroidered on plain fabric (I have myself thousands of coral beads saved for this, since over a decade, so don't hold your breath). It is therefore unclear if patterns such as these were meant to show woven or embroidered patterns.

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About the blog

A blog about historical costuming and the history of dress, mostly from the period 1000 to 1600, but with occasional excursions into the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries.

The blog started as a way for me too try and make the information from my old costuming web page that I started over ten years ago more accessible. Most of the content was moved over, and you find the content of the old web pages as pages, listed to the left in the blog. Gradually more, new, costumes are added, but in the blog you also find posts about dress history in general, not only stuff that I have made.